New findings using data from NASA’s IXPE (Imaging X-ray Polarimetry Explorer) mission offer unprecedented insight into the shape and nature of a structure important to black holes called a corona.
A corona is a shifting plasma region
that is part of the flow of matter onto a black hole, about which scientists
have only a theoretical understanding. The new results reveal the corona’s
shape for the first time, and may aid scientists’ understanding of the corona’s
role in feeding and sustaining black holes.
This illustration of material swirling around a black
hole highlights a particular feature, called the “corona,” that shines brightly
in X-ray light. In this depiction, the corona can be seen as a purple haze
floating above the underlying accretion disk, and extending slightly inside of
its inner edge. The material within the inner accretion disk is incredibly hot
and would glow with a blinding blue-white light, but here has been reduced in
brightness to make the corona stand out with better contrast. Its purple color
is purely illustrative, standing in for the X-ray glow that would not be
obvious in visible light. The warp in the disk is a realistic representation of
how the black hole’s immense gravity acts like an optical lens, distorting our
view of the flat disk that encircles it.
NASA/Caltech-IPAC/Robert Hurt
Many black holes, so named because not even light can escape their titanic
gravity, are surrounded by accretion disks, debris-cluttered whirlpools of gas. Some black holes also have relativistic jets – ultra-powerful outbursts of matter hurled into space at high speed
by black holes that are actively eating material in their surroundings.
Less well known, perhaps, is that
snacking black holes, much like Earth’s Sun and other stars, also possess a
superheated corona. While the Sun’s corona, which is the star’s outermost atmosphere, burns
at roughly 1.8 million degrees Fahrenheit, the temperature of a black hole
corona is estimated at billions of degrees.
Astrophysicists previously identified coronae among stellar-mass black holes – those formed by
a star’s collapse – and supermassive black holes such as the one at the heart
of the Milky Way galaxy.
“Scientists have long speculated on
the makeup and geometry of the corona,” said Lynnie Saade, a postdoctoral
researcher at NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama, and
lead author of the new findings. “Is it a sphere above and below the black
hole, or an atmosphere generated by the accretion disk, or perhaps plasma
located at the base of the jets?”
Enter IXPE, which specializes
in X-ray polarization, the characteristic of light that helps map the shape and structure of
even the most powerful energy sources, illuminating their inner workings even
when the objects are too small, bright, or distant to see directly. Just as we
can safely observe the Sun’s corona during a total solar eclipse, IXPE provides the means to clearly study the black hole’s accretion
geometry, or the shape and structure of its accretion disk and related
structures, including the corona.
“X-ray polarization provides a new
way to examine black hole accretion geometry,” Saade said. “If the accretion
geometry of black holes is similar regardless of mass, we expect the same to be
true of their polarization properties.”
IXPE demonstrated that, among all
black holes for which coronal properties could be directly measured via
polarization, the corona was found to be extended in the same direction as the
accretion disk – providing, for the first time, clues to the corona’s shape and
clear evidence of its relationship to the accretion disk. The results rule out
the possibility that the corona is shaped like a lamppost hovering over the
disk.
The research team studied data from
IXPE’s observations of 12 black holes, among them Cygnus X-1 and Cygnus X-3, stellar-mass binary black hole systems about 7,000 and 37,000 light-years
from Earth, respectively, and LMC X-1 and LMC X-3, stellar-mass black holes in
the Large Magellanic Cloud more than 165,000 light-years away. IXPE also
observed a number of supermassive black holes, including the one at the center
of the Circinus galaxy, 13 million light-years from Earth, and those in
galaxies NGC 1068 and NGC 4151, 47 million light-years away and nearly 62 million light-years away,
respectively.
Stellar mass black holes typically
have a mass roughly 10 to 30 times that of Earth’s Sun, whereas supermassive
black holes may have a mass that is millions to tens of billions of times
larger. Despite these vast differences in scale, IXPE data suggests both types
of black holes create accretion disks of similar geometry.
That’s surprising, said Marshall
astrophysicist Philip Kaaret, principal investigator for the IXPE mission,
because the way the two types are fed is completely different.
“Stellar-mass black holes rip mass
from their companion stars, whereas supermassive black holes devour everything
around them,” he said. “Yet the accretion mechanism functions much the same
way.”
That’s an exciting prospect, Saade
said, because it suggests that studies of stellar-mass black holes – typically
much closer to Earth than their much more massive cousins – can help shed new
light on properties of supermassive black holes as well.
The team next hopes to make
additional examinations of both types.
Saade anticipates there’s much more
to glean from X-ray studies of these behemoths. “IXPE has provided the first
opportunity in a long time for X-ray astronomy to reveal the underlying
processes of accretion and unlock new findings about black holes,” she said.
The complete findings are available in the latest issue of The Astrophysical Journal.
By: Beth Ridgeway
Source: NASA’s IXPE Helps Researchers Determine Shape of Black Hole Corona - NASA
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